The X Factor

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[[Simon Cowell]] (2004-10)<br>
[[Simon Cowell]] (2004-10)<br>
Sharon Osbourne (2004-7)<br>
Sharon Osbourne (2004-7)<br>
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Dannii Minogue (2007-)<br>
+
Dannii Minogue (2007-10)<br>
Brian Friedman (London auditions only, 2007)<br>
Brian Friedman (London auditions only, 2007)<br>
Cheryl Cole (2008-10)<br>
Cheryl Cole (2008-10)<br>
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More tweaks were made for the 2010 series, with the judges each choosing from eight acts at the Judge's Houses stage. This change was partly introduced to give Dannii Minogue and Cheryl Cole a wider field of hopefuls to choose from, as both had missed some or all of the early stages of the auditions due to pregnancy and ill health respectively. A further change for the 2010 series saw the cut-off age for the 'Overs' category increased from 25 to 28.
More tweaks were made for the 2010 series, with the judges each choosing from eight acts at the Judge's Houses stage. This change was partly introduced to give Dannii Minogue and Cheryl Cole a wider field of hopefuls to choose from, as both had missed some or all of the early stages of the auditions due to pregnancy and ill health respectively. A further change for the 2010 series saw the cut-off age for the 'Overs' category increased from 25 to 28.
-
Perhaps the biggest change the series saw was the withdrawal of Simon Cowell and Cheryl Cole from the judging panel from the 2011 series onwards. With a localised version of the programme due to air in the USA at the same time as the UK version, after months of speculation, it was announced on 5 May 2011 that Cowell and Cole would not judge both shows, and would no longer be weekly judges on the UK version of the show. ITV did however state that Cowell and Cole would continue to be an "enormous presence backstage".
+
Perhaps the biggest change the series saw was the withdrawal of Simon Cowell and Cheryl Cole from the judging panel from the 2011 series onwards. With a localised version of the programme due to air in the USA at the same time as the UK version, after months of speculation, it was announced on 5 May 2011 that Cowell and Cole would not judge both shows, and would no longer be weekly judges on the UK version of the show. ITV did however state that Cowell and Cole would continue to be an "enormous presence backstage". Furthermore, on 14 May 2011, it was revealed that Dannii Minogue would also leave the programme, reportedly due to a scheduling clash with her judging commitments on ''Australia's Got Talent''. As a result, the Manchester auditions of the new series were pushed back, in order to allow more time for the new judging panel to be put together.
A celebrity version - ''The X Factor: Battle of the Stars'' - aired in May and June 2006, as a [[Big Brother]] spoiler. Those taking part:
A celebrity version - ''The X Factor: Battle of the Stars'' - aired in May and June 2006, as a [[Big Brother]] spoiler. Those taking part:

Revision as of 12:12, 17 May 2011

Image:The X Factor logo.jpg

Contents

Host

Kate Thornton (2004-6)

Dermot O'Leary (2007-)

Co-hosts

Judges:
Louis Walsh
Simon Cowell (2004-10)
Sharon Osbourne (2004-7)
Dannii Minogue (2007-10)
Brian Friedman (London auditions only, 2007)
Cheryl Cole (2008-10)

Guest Judges:
Paula Abdul (London auditions, 2006)
Geri Halliwell (Glasgow auditions, 2010)
Natalie Imbruglia (Birmingham auditions, 2010)
Katy Perry (Dublin auditions, 2010)
Pixie Lott (Cardiff auditions, 2010)
Nicole Scherzinger (Manchester auditions and bootcamp, 2010)

ITV2 coverage (The Xtra Factor):
Ben Shephard (2004-6)
Fearne Cotton (2007)
Holly Willoughby (2008-9)
Konnie Huq (2010)

Announcer:
Peter Dickson (all series)
Brian Blessed (The Xtra Factor) (2010-)

Web coverage (The F Factor):
Matt Edmondson (2010-)

Broadcast

Syco Productions and TalkbackThames for ITV1/2, 4 September 2004 to present

Synopsis

Phone-vote based talent show, very similar to Pop Idol, only without an upper age limit, and allowing bands and solo acts to audition.

In fact, the mechanics of the show are slightly more complicated. After the Hilarious Auditions shows, and the Boot Camp phase which whittles the chosen few down to a more manageable number, each of the judges is assigned one set of acts (Boys, Girls, Over-25s, or Groups) to mentor. After jetting their small group of remaining hopefuls to some of the worlds most glamorous locations, they choose the acts which will progress to the studio-based elimination phase. Every week during this phase, each act sings a song (two in the later stages), and the viewers vote for their favourite. But! The lowest-scorer isn't necessarily eliminated. The two worst achievers instead must sing again in the second show, and the judges decide who stays and who goes.

All these changes to the Pop Idol format have seemingly been made for the express purpose (aside from the unsuccessful attempt to avoid court cases - see below) to bring the judges into the spotlight as much as possible, essentially overshadowing the contestants themselves. This is evidenced by the fact that the first series' winner - Steve something - has apparently sunk without trace, whereas Cowell, Walsh and Co. live in solid gold houses and eat nothing but caviar and unicorn steaks.

Steve... something

This ramps up the tension, BUT shock horror - the judges are biased (and we didn't get that one from The Sun). Because they obviously want to keep their own acts in, this frequently results in very bad decisions (poor performers such as the Conway Sisters and Chico stayed in for far too long).

The X Factor, then, is nothing much other than a butchered version of its predecessor: the host's not as good, the rules make little sense (especially near the end when they change them again, eliminating the judges' say and making the contestants just sing again in the second show), and with pointless pantomime between the judging panel getting in the way of any actual talent that the show might theoretically uncover.

Over the years, several changes have been made to the format. The 2007 series was perhaps the series that saw the most changes, with the addition of a fourth judge in singer and Australia's Got Talent judge Dannii Minogue, the lower age barrier coming down to 14 years old, and the original Under-25 category being split into male and female solo singers. These changes coincided with judge Louis Walsh briefly leaving the format - he would be back half-way through the auditions, and some suggested this was just a stunt for the press. Presenter Kate Thornton also left the show after the 2006 series; her exit was more permanent.

The 2008 series saw a major change with original judge Sharon Osbourne being replaced by Girls Aloud singer Cheryl Cole, while the 2009 series saw the programme take a leaf out of Britain's Got Talent's book, with the initial auditions and the Boot Camp stage both being conducted in front of an audience in convention centres, rather than a closed room with just the judges. The 2009 series also saw the lower age barrier raised back up to 16 years old.

More tweaks were made for the 2010 series, with the judges each choosing from eight acts at the Judge's Houses stage. This change was partly introduced to give Dannii Minogue and Cheryl Cole a wider field of hopefuls to choose from, as both had missed some or all of the early stages of the auditions due to pregnancy and ill health respectively. A further change for the 2010 series saw the cut-off age for the 'Overs' category increased from 25 to 28.

Perhaps the biggest change the series saw was the withdrawal of Simon Cowell and Cheryl Cole from the judging panel from the 2011 series onwards. With a localised version of the programme due to air in the USA at the same time as the UK version, after months of speculation, it was announced on 5 May 2011 that Cowell and Cole would not judge both shows, and would no longer be weekly judges on the UK version of the show. ITV did however state that Cowell and Cole would continue to be an "enormous presence backstage". Furthermore, on 14 May 2011, it was revealed that Dannii Minogue would also leave the programme, reportedly due to a scheduling clash with her judging commitments on Australia's Got Talent. As a result, the Manchester auditions of the new series were pushed back, in order to allow more time for the new judging panel to be put together.

A celebrity version - The X Factor: Battle of the Stars - aired in May and June 2006, as a Big Brother spoiler. Those taking part:

  • Solo performers: Lucy Benjamin, Gillian McKeith, Michelle Marsh, Chris Moyles, Nikki Sanderson, Matt Stevens

Key moments

In October 2007, Walsh let slip on Graham Norton's chat show that the houses that the contestants fly to before the studio knock-out stage do not in fact belong to the judges. A spokesman for the show claimed that viewers were not misled because at no point were the properties referred to as the judges' "homes". A spokesman called Pinocchio, presumably.

Inventor

Technically Simon Cowell, but Simon Fuller of 19 Management took him to court over it for its similarities to Pop Idol. The case was settled out of court.

Trivia

Series 1 winner Steve Brookstein was a finalist on The Big Big Talent Show.

Series 6 runner-up Olly Murs previously appeared on Deal or No Deal. He won £10.

Cheryl Cole's former Popstars: The Rivals co-star Nikk Mager auditioned for the show in 2008. Cole decided that she couldn't judge him, and left the panel, leaving his fate in the hands of the other judges. He didn't make it through to the Boot Camp stage, and the encounter left both Cole and Mager in tears.

The seventh series of the show in 2010 saw a series of guest judges fill in for Dannii Minogue during the open audition stage of the show, while Minogue was away for the birth of her first child. Minogue returned to the judging panel for the Judge's Houses stage. Nicole Scherzinger, who appeared as one of the guest judges during the open audition stage, also appeared on the judging panel during the Boot Camp stage, as a result of Cheryl Cole's absence due to ill health.

Max George, who made up one-fifth of boyband Avenue, who were ejected from the third series of the show at the Boot Camp stage due to having been specifically formed for the show and having professional representation, went on to become a member of chart-topping boyband The Wanted. He eventually performed on The X Factor stage some four years after narrowly missing out on the opportunity, when The Wanted appeared on the eighth results show of the seventh series.

Despite the setback, contestants who don't win the series occasionally go on to have successful singing careers. Series five contestant Diana Vickers, series six contestant Olly Murs, and perhaps most notably, series five group JLS, all went on to have Number 1 singles. In addition, although a full-blown career didn't develop, series two contestant Chico Slimani also reached Number 1, while classical acts G4 from the first series, and Rhydian Roberts from the fourth series, although not making Number 1, also regularly appeared in the charts for several years after their stints on The X Factor.

Third-placed series six contestant Stacey Solomon would later win the tenth series of I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!.

The music often played during the pre-opening title montage, and as the judges take to the stage, is the Munich Radio Orchestra's recording of O Fortuna, which was composed by Carl Orff for his 1935/6 work Carmina Burana. Thanks in part to its use on The X Factor (and a classic advertisement for male grooming products), in December 2009 a survey revealed it to be the UK's most-played classical recording of the previous 75 years.

Localised versions of the format have aired in no less than 37 territories around the world, including countries such as Chile, Indonesia, and Kazakhstan.

Champions

2004 Steve Brookstein, as mentored by Simon Cowell
2005 Shayne Ward, as mentored by Louis Walsh
2006 Leona Lewis, as mentored by Simon Cowell
2007 Leon Jackson, as mentored by Dannii Minogue
2008 Alexandra Burke, as mentored by Cheryl Cole
2009 Joe McElderry, as mentored by Cheryl Cole
2010 Matt Cardle, as mentored by Dannii Minogue

The X Factor: Battle of the Stars
2005 Lucy Benjamin, as mentored by Louis Walsh

Web links

Official site

Off the Telly Review

Bother's Bar review

X Factor fans site

See also

Weaver's Week review

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